Gold above $1,300 for first time in 5 months

Gold prices have risen above $1,300 an ounce for the first time since August 2014. This is due to the global economic slowdown, expectation of ECB ‘easy money’ and currency volatility, Mark O'Byrne, research director of GoldCore, told RT.

The spot price has jumped by 1.5 percent to $1,303.63 for an
ounce on Wednesday early trading. February futures rose by 1.2
percent to $1,292.50 an ounce on the New York Comex.

Last week the price rose by 4.7 percent for the first time since
2013. Gold has added 10
percent to its value since the beginning of the year.

Earlier this week the IMF and EBRD cut its forecast for world economic
growth due to geopolitical tensions and falling oil prices.

“Geopolitical risk is as high as its been in many of our
lifetimes,” Mark O’Byrne, research director at Goldcore Ltd,
one of the world's leading gold brokers, told RT, adding that the
policy introduced by the central banks across the world has also
added risks to the global economy.

“The policy of response that we tend to see from the central
banks, particularly the Western central banks and the Fed, the
Bank of England, the Bank of Japan, and now the ECB. Their policy
tends to be to decrease interest rates, and they’re now nearly
zero percent in the Western world,” he said “That’s the
primary driver of high gold prices.”

#Gold
just ticked over $1300. Maybe the central banks are supporting
the price to encourage "inflationary expectations."

“The more you create something, the less it will be worth in
the long-term,” said O’Byrne. “So if you print trillions
and trillions of dollars, pounds and euro, they will have less
value over the long-term.”

The US program of quantitative easing lead to a 70 percent
increase in gold prices from 2008 to 2011.

High volatility of currencies, including the Swiss franc and
Russian ruble also added to the rising price. The cancellation of the euro peg on January 15 by
the Swiss National Bank raised concerns about the currency’s
reliability and triggered investors to search for new more
reliable assets.

“Gold is both a commodity and a currency, it’s very rare, and
most people have no idea how rare it is,” he added.
“That’s why it has retained its value throughout
history.”

O’Byrne suggests gold is a great hedging instrument. However, he
wouldn’t advise to put all your assets into gold, as it
constantly goes up and down.

“The advice is you always put 5 to 10 percent of your wealth
in gold. You hope the price for gold doesn’t go up very sharply
because it generally means the rest of your wealth is not doing
well. So that’s a very good hedge and diversification,” he
said.

The forecasts by investment banks for the gold market differ.
Goldman Sachs and Societe Generale expect a decline in the price
by the end of the year, with SocGen predicting a fall to $1,000
an ounce by December 31.

O’Byrne says prices should increase, possibly 25-30 percent. He
said it was unlikely that gold will rise to the figures of 2011
when it was $1,900 per ounce, adding however that last Thursday’s
40 percent jump of the Swiss franc shows that nothing is
impossible these days.

“If you see what happened to the Swiss franc vs. the dollar
and the euro there last week, the Swiss franc rose by 40 percent
against the dollar in about 13 minutes. So if it happened for the
Swiss franc vs. the euro and the dollar, this can also happen for
gold,” he said.

Meanwhile, analysts from Standard Chartered expect gold prices
will strengthen to $1,320 an ounce in the fourth quarter amid the
weakening of the dollar.